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Gender Roles In The Turn Of The Screw

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The horror genre includes a variety of subgenres that are distinctive in every way. In each sub genre it's intended to frighten, scare, startle and even disgust the reader and these devices are a necessity to have when writing a novel of any kind. The Turn of The Screw exemplifies its subgenre as supernatural and this sets in place the tone and plot of the story. The supernatural sub genre is basically creatures that don't exist in the real world such as ghost, vampire, and werewolves. Since the morality of the book is set off of fiction most of the novel will be placed in a chronological order of mystery, which means finding one clue that leads to another and so on till the mystery is solved or never solving it at all.
The Turn of the Screw is about the life of a governess who has been hired to watch over two kids and the home while the master, their uncle, is away. The uncle left a short but specific set of instructions about the occupation and what it included. The instructions plainly said not to bother him under any circumstance. The Governess is …show more content…

Gender roles are societal norms that dictate people on how to behave and be accepted socially based on their gender. The governess expressed many roles including the paternal role this is indicated because of how she watches over the home and also because her sense of protecting everyone in the house from the ghost that are terrorizing them. “…I should serve as an expiatory victim and guard the tranquillity of the rest of the household” (James 51). The childlike role is expressed when she loses her mind; Mrs. Grose the higher-ranked housekeeper tries to comfort her and make her feel better because of all the stress she's acquired due to watching the kids and chasing the ghost around. And of course the maternal role where the Governess takes care of the children by cooking, cleaning and protecting them from

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